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The evolution of the concept of hell over millennia is explored, challenging the traditional evangelical idea and questioning the nature of eternal torment, with a focus on speculation and its impact on beliefs.
The podcast delves into the confrontations that evangelical leaders face regarding the traditional concept of hell, emphasizing the shift in perspectives from flowery descriptions to more nuanced discussions about the nature of hell.
The episode examines the impact of the fear and trauma associated with the concept of hell on individuals who have left the evangelical faith, highlighting the liberating effect of questioning longstanding dogmas about hell.
The podcast introduces the book 'Holy Hell, A Case Against Eternal Damnation' and discusses the author's intention to provide a more accessible perspective on damnation for laypeople, focusing on the idea of purgatorial universalism.
The imagery of purgation and refinement akin to a metallurgical process is presented, drawing parallels from literature, such as 'A Christmas Carol' and 'The Great Divorce,' to depict a transformative and redemptive view of hell.
We trace the evolution of the human construct “Hell” (Sheol; Hades; Gehenna; Dante’s Inferno), then talk about how hell may not be a place of eternal conscious torture by fire (the modern Evangelical version), but a transitional process intended to purify (Purgatory and Universalism).
One of the most disturbing elements of the “Good News” preached by many Evangelicals has to do with an eternal conscious torment in a fiery hell. This element is often the reason why so many people give up that form of faith, and the reason that so many people seek psychological and pastoral help for the trauma they are experiencing and from which they are trying to recover. Nonetheless, it’s a point that so many Evangelicals double-down upon and get so very animated about. Think about the reaction that Rob Bell evoked when he published his book Love Wins! Netflix still carries a great movie — Come Sunday — which centers around the deeply polarizing response that an up-and-coming Evangelical preacher experiences … from family, from members of his church, and from his denominational leaders … when he begins to question everything about eternal conscious torment in a fiery hell.
In this episode, we talk to an Exvangelical pastor (Derek Kubilus) about his book (Holy Hell: a case against eternal damnation) in which he describes discovering a deep hell-shaped well of trauma in his congregants when they asked him to teach a class on heaven and hell, and also discovering a whole new understanding of hell when he actually studied what the Bible had to say (or not say) about hell:
Luke finished by asking for an opinion on his own uncertainties about any kind of afterlife (because who can really know?), in contrast to the certainty that there is a hell/heaven to be experienced on this side of the grave. That we should be working against the many forms of “hell” that we create here and now on earth, and work towards bringing heaven down to earth (as Christ said: “thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven”). Derek agreed with the “here and now” part of Luke’s idea, but still feels there’s also something metaphysical about it … that there is something as well “on the other side.”
As always, tell us your thoughts on this topic …
Find more information about Derek Kubilus at his own web-page, or at Eerdman’s page for his book.
If you enjoyed this episode, you may also like our previous episode about Hell (Episode #88), or our episodes on religious trauma related to the threat of hell (Episode #46 and #47), or our 7-part miniseries looking at the soul and the afterlife (Episodes #5 to #11) . Also check out Luke’s own book on the soul and the afterlife.
Episode image used by permission.
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